SECTION TWO

niE-iRMrXol. XUX

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I'niuiMty of Kentucky, Lexington,

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Sept. -- 7, l!)ta7

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Opening Of Shawneetown
Scheduled For December

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of Kentucky.

ber of 1956. has a waiting list of
more than 200 families. The completion of Shawneetown. which will
have 18G units, should accommodate most of the families now waiting for housing. Cooperstown has

Flank D. Peterson, vice
president in charge of Business
Dr.

Administration for the University,
said last wee that two of the six
buildings in the new Shawneetown
housing pi eject are scheduled to
open in December.
The Shawneetown project, lo
cated in the southeast corner of
the University, may be ready for
total occupancy by the beginning
of the Spring semester, Peterson

units.
Peterson said the cost of rent at
Shawneetown will be slightly
greater than that at Cooperstown.
He attributed this to a 15 per cent
increase in cost of construction.
However, he "guess-timatethat
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definite figure for the rent, but
he said the rates would probably
be "about five or six dollars higher
than Cooperstown." Cooperstown
residents pay t.r)2.50 for efficiency
apartments and $72.50 for
apartments.
E. B. Furris, chief engineer of
UK Maintenance and Operations,
said each of the six Shawneetown
buildings will have its own central
heating and central hot water
(Continued on Tage 10)

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Dormitories
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Married students at the University will live at Cooperstown and the
unfinished Shawneetown, shown above. Shawneetown is expected to
be ready fcr partial occupancy in December.

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house over 300 resident.

Four Sororities Faced
With Rooming Crisis
The greatest housing prohlt-at tin I'liiversity at present
heing shouKlereil ly the national sororities on campus.

Six sororities were scheduled to tion.
move from their original residences
The four remaining sororities
into six new houses, comprising have bevn unable to house the gitU
the University owneil sorority row, who moved out of the dormitories
early this month.
List spring to till the enlarged so- Only two of these house were rot ity row house quotas. I heso
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ready for occupancy when
h.we had to airance for .i
students returned to campus, and part of then new resident to livo
these two units are still undergo- - with town girls-o- r
sorority alums,
(Continurd on Page 4)
ins the final touches of construe- -

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Nearing: completion. Sorority Row will be ready for occupancy in the
near future. Two sororities have already moved into their new house.

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With the arrival of approximately 358 freshmen coeds to the
UK campus, school housing officials are having to strain all facilities to house these girls.
If Holmes Hall, now under construction at Euclid and Limestone,
had reached its hoped for completion this year, the dormitory
housing problem would have been
greatly relieved. December has
now been set as the completion
date on this project which is only
80 per cent finished at the present.
When the SI, 131.000 dorm is open
for student use, approximately 2!)'J
women students can be housed
without difficulty.
Meanwhile. Patterson, Boyd- - and
Jewell halls have been crowded to
capacity to take care of the great
bulk of women students. Keene- (Continued on Page 10)

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The nearly completed Holme Hall will help relieve the housing proh-lefor coeds. Scheduled to open net semester, the building will

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Relief is in sight for the more said.
the rent would be "about 30 per
than 2C0 married students now on
Cooperstown, the UK housing cent below the present town rates."
the waiting list for family housing project which opened in SeptemPeterson declined to guess at a

at the University

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